
The New Penguin Book of English Verse
by Keegan, Paul-
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | |
'Ich am of Irlande' | p. 3 |
'Maiden in the more lay' | p. 3 |
'Al night by the rose, rose' | p. 4 |
'Bitwene March and Averil' | p. 5 |
'Erthe tok of erthe' | p. 6 |
'Gold and al this worldes wyn' | p. 7 |
'Gloria mundi est' | p. 7 |
'Love me broughte' | p. 8 |
[The Dragon Speaks] | p. 8 |
from The Parliament of Fowls: [Catalogue of the Birds] | p. 9 |
from The Parliament of Fowls: [Roundel] | p. 11 |
from The Boke of Troilus: [Envoi] | p. 12 |
'When Adam dalf and Eve span' | p. 15 |
from The Vision of Pier Plowman: [Prologue] | p. 15 |
from The Vision of Pier Plowman: [Gluttony in the Ale-house] | p. 17 |
from The General Prologue 'When that Aprill with his shoures soote' | p. 20 |
from The General Prologue [The Prioress] | p. 21 |
from The Knight's Tale [The Temple of Mars] | p. 22 |
from The Knight's Tale [Saturn] | p. 24 |
from The Milleres Tale [Alysoun] | p. 25 |
from The Wife of Bath's Prologue 'My fourthe housebonde was a revelour' | p. 26 |
from The Pardoner's Tale 'Thise riotoures thre of whiche I telle' | p. 28 |
from Patience: [Jonah and the Whale] | p. 31 |
from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: [Gawain Journeys North] | p. 33 |
Envoy to Scogan | p. 36 |
from Confessio Amantis: [Pygmaleon] | p. 37 |
from Confessio Amantis: [The Rape of Lucrece] | p. 39 |
from The Complaint of Hoccleve 'Afur that hervest inned had hise sheves' | p. 41 |
[Ballade] ('In the forest of Noyous Hevynes') | p. 44 |
[Roundel] ('Take, take this cosse, atonys, atonys, my hert!') | p. 45 |
[Roundel] ('Go forth myn hert wyth my lady') | p. 46 |
'Adam lay y-bownden' | p. 46 |
'I syng of a mayden' | p. 47 |
'The merthe of alle this londe' | p. 48 |
[Christ Triumphant] | p. 49 |
[Holly against Ivy] | p. 49 |
'Ther is no rose of swych vertu' | p. 50 |
from Phyllyp Sparowe: 'Whan I remembre agayn' | p. 50 |
from The Testament of Cresseid 'O ladyis fair of Troy and Greece, attend' | p. 54 |
When He Wes Seik | p. 59 |
'Done is a battell on the dragon blak' | p. 63 |
'In to thir dirk and drubile dayis' | p. 64 |
from The Aeneid: from Book I [Aeolus Looses the Winds] | p. 66 |
from The Aeneid: from The Proloug of the Sevyax Baik of Eneados | p. 67 |
[The Corpus Christi Caml] | p. 70 |
'Farewell, this worldl I take my love for evere' | p. 70 |
Draw me nere, draw me nere' | p. 72 |
'Westron wynde when wyll thow blow' | p. 74 |
from A Goodly Garlande or Chapelet of Laurell: [The Garden of the Muses: lopas' Song] | p. 74 |
To Maystres Isabell Pennell | p. 75 |
from Speke Parott: [Parrot's Complaint] | p. 76 |
'Pleasure it is' | p. 78 |
Psalm 137: Super flumina | p. 79 |
'The longe love that in my thought doeth harbar' | p. 79 |
'Who so list to hount I knowe where is an hynde' | p. 80 |
'They fle from me that sometyme did me seke' | p. 80 |
'My lute awake! Perfourme the last' | p. 81 |
'Forget not yet the tryde entent' | p. 82 |
'Myne owne John Poyntz, sins ye delight to know' | p. 83 |
An Excellent Epitaffe of Syr Thomas Wyat | p. 85 |
The Balade whych Anne Askewe made and sange whan she was in Newgate | p. 87 |
[Chorus from Thyestes] ('Stond who so list upon the Slipper toppe') | p. 88 |
'O happy dames, that may embrace' | p. 89 |
'Alas, so all thinges nowe doe holde their peace' | p. 90 |
from Certayan bokes of Virgiles Aenaeis | p. 90 |
[Aeneas searches for his wife] | |
from The Geneva Bible, Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 ('To all things there is an appointed time') | p. 92 |
'OF Youth He Singeth' | p. 93 |
Commynge Horne-warde out of Spayne | p. 93 |
An Epytaphe of the Death of Nicolas Grimoald | p. 94 |
from The First Four Books of Ovid: [Proserpine and Dis] | p. 95 |
from The First Four Books of Ovid: [Dasphne and Apollo] | p. 95 |
from The Fifteen Books of Ovid [Medes's Incantation] | p. 98 |
'To luve unluvit it is ane pane' | p. 99 |
'Christ was the word that spake it' | p. 100 |
from The Shepheardes Calendar [Roundelay] | p. 100 |
lambicurn Trimetrum | p. 102 |
[Chorus from Hercules Furens] | p. 103 |
My Love is Past | p. 103 |
A New Courtly Sonet, of the Lady Greensleeves | p. 105 |
'My prime of youth is but a froste of cares' | p. 106 |
'Constant Penelope, sends to thee carelesse Ulisses' | p. 107 |
from Sixe idillia ... chosen out of ... Theocritus: [Adonis] | p. 107 |
'My true love hath my hart, and I have his' | p. 108 |
'As you came from the holy land' | p. 109 |
Sonet ('Fra bane to banc fra wod to wod I rin') | p. 110 |
'His Golden lockes, Time hath to Silver turn'd' | p. 110 |
from The Faerie Queene: from Book II, Canto XII [The Bower of Blisse Destroyed] | p. 111 |
from The Faerie Queene: from Book III, Canto VI [The Gardin of Adonis] | p. 114 |
from The Faerie Queene: from Book III, Canto XI [Britomart in the House of the Enchanter Busyrane] | p. 117 |
from Astrophil and Stella: 1 'Loving in truth, and faine in verse my love to show' | p. 119 |
from Astrophil and Stella: 31 'With how sad steps, o Moone, thou climb'st the skies' | p. 120 |
from Astrophil and Stella: 33 'I might, unhappie word, o me, I might' | p. 120 |
'Harke, al you ladies that do sleep' | p. 121 |
from Ariosto's Orlando Furioso: [Astolfo flies by Chariot to the Moon] | p. 122 |
from Midas: 'Pan's Syrinx was a Girle indeed' | p. 125 |
from Delia: 45 'Care-charmer sleepe, sonne of the Sable night' | p. 125 |
'Deere to my soule, then leave me not forsaken' | p. 126 |
The Lie | p. 126 |
'Praisd be Dianas faire and harmles light' | p. 129 |
The Sheepheards Sorrow, Being Disdained in Love | p. 129 |
from Parthenophil and Parthenophe [Sestina]: ('Then, first with lockes disheveled, and bare') | p. 132 |
from The Countress of Pembroke's Arcadia: 'Yee Gote-heard Gods, that love the grassie mountaines' | p. 134 |
from Love's Labours Lost: 'When Dasies pied, and Violets blew' | p. 137 |
'Weare I a Kinge I coude commande content' | p. 138 |
from Amoretti: Sonnet LXVII ('Lyke as huntsman after weary chace') | p. 138 |
from Amoretti: Sonnet LXVIII ('Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day') | p. 139 |
Decease Release | p. 139 |
New Heaven, New Warre | p. 141 |
The Burning Babe | p. 141 |
from The Old Wives Tale: 'When as the Rie reach to the chin' | p. 142 |
from The Old Wives Tale: 'Gently dip: but not too deepe' | p. 142 |
Prothalamion | p. 143 |
In Cosmum | p. 148 |
from Orchestra, or a Poeme of Dauncing: ['The speach of Love persuading men to learn Dancing'] | p. 148 |
'Since Bonny-boots was dead, that so divinely' | p. 150 |
Of the Reed That the Jews Set in Our Saviour's Hand | p. 150 |
Of His Conversion | p. 151 |
'Forsaken woods, trees with sharpe storms opprest' | p. 151 |
'When to my deadlie pleasure' | p. 152 |
'Leave me o Love, which reachest but to dust' | p. 153 |
Psalm 58 ('And call yee this to utter what is just') | p. 154 |
from Psalm 139 ['Each inmost peece in me is thine'] | p. 155 |
from Hero and Leander: 'His bodie was a straight as Circes wand' | p. 156 |
'Hark, all ye lovely saints above' | p. 159 |
from All Ovids Elegies: Book I, Elegia 5 ('In summers heat and mid-time of the day') | p. 159 |
from All Ovids Elegies: Book III, Elegia 13 ('Seeing thou art faire, I barre not thy false playing') | p. 160 |
On His Mistris | p. 161 |
from Idea: 5 'Nothing but No and I, and I and No' | p. 163 |
from Of the Day Estivall: 'O perfite light, quhilk schaid away' | p. 163 |
from David and Fair Bethsabe: 'Hot sunne, coole fire, temperd with sweet aire' | p. 167 |
from Musophilus: [Stonehenge] | p. 168 |
from Caelica: Sonnet XLV ('Absence, the noble truce') | p. 169 |
from Caelica: Sonnet LXXXIV ('Farewell sweet boy, complaine not of my truth') | p. 170 |
from Caelica: Sonnet LXXXV ('Love is the Peace, whereto all thoughts doe strive') | p. 171 |
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